@article{StechowMcCollumRiahietal.2015, author = {Stechow, Christoph von and McCollum, David and Riahi, Keywan and Minx, Jan C. and Kriegler, Elmar and van Vuuren, Detlef P. and Jewell, Jessica and Robledo-Abad, Carmenza and Hertwich, Edgar and Tavoni, Massimo and Mirasgedis, Sevastianos and Lah, Oliver and Roy, Joyashree and Mulugetta, Yacob and Dubash, Navroz K. and Bollen, Johannes and {\"U}rge-Vorsatz, Diana and Edenhofer, Ottmar}, title = {Integrating global climate change mitigation goals with other sustainability objectives : a synthesis}, journal = {Annual review of environment and resources}, volume = {40}, doi = {10.1146/annurev-environ-021113-095626}, pages = {363 -- 394}, year = {2015}, abstract = {Achieving a truly sustainable energy transition requires progress across multiple dimensions beyond climate change mitigation goals. This article reviews and synthesizes results from disparate strands of literature on the coeffects of mitigation to inform climate policy choices at different governance levels. The literature documents many potential cobenefits of mitigation for nonclimate objectives, such as human health and energy security, but little is known about their overall welfare implications. Integrated model studies highlight that climate policies as part of well-designed policy packages reduce the overall cost of achieving multiple sustainability objectives. The incommensurability and uncertainties around the quantification of coeffects become, however, increasingly pervasive the more the perspective shifts from sectoral and local to economy wide and global, the more objectives are analyzed, and the more the results are expressed in economic rather than nonmonetary terms. Different strings of evidence highlight the role and importance of energy efficiency for realizing synergies across multiple sustainability objectives.}, language = {en} }